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    The Whole Town's Talking


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      The Whole Town’s Talking is a work of fiction. All incidents and dialogue, and all characters with the exception of some well-known historical and public figures, are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Where real-life historical or public figures appear, the situations, incidents, and dialogues concerning those persons are entirely fictional and are not intended to depict actual events or to change the entirely fictional nature of the work. In all other respects, any resemblance to persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.

      Copyright © 2016 by Willina Lane Productions, Inc.

      All rights reserved.

      Published in the United States by Random House, an imprint and division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

      RANDOM HOUSE and the HOUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

      Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following for permission to reprint previously published material:

      ALFRED MUSIC: Excerpt from “I Only Have Eyes for You,” words by Al Dubin, music by Harry Warren, copyright © 1934 (renewed) WB Music Corp. All rights reserved. Used by permission of Alfred Music.

      ALFRED MUSIC AND HAL LEONARD LLC: Excerpt from “They Can’t Take That Away from Me” (from Shall We Dance), music and lyrics by George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin, copyright © 1936 (renewed) Nokawi Music, Ira Gershwin Music, and Frankie G. Songs. All rights for Nokawi Music administered by Imagem Sounds. All rights for Ira Gershwin Music administered by WB Music Corp. All rights for Frankie G. Songs administered by Songs Music Publishing. All rights reserved. Used by permission of Alfred Music and Hal Leonard LLC.

      Hardback ISBN 9781400065950

      International edition ISBN 9780399589560

      Ebook ISBN 9780399588297

      randomhousebooks.com

      v4.1

      ep

      Contents

      Cover

      Title Page

      Copyright

      What the Crow Knows

      Prologue

      And So It Begins….

      Lordor Nordstrom

      Love and Marriage

      A Swedish Lady

      The Verdict

      Katrina Olsen

      Springfield, Missouri

      The Man in the Derby

      Missouri

      Chicago Razzle-Dazzle

      Missouri

      The Adventure

      The Girl on the Platform

      The Box Social

      Missouri

      A Daughter’s Promise

      1891

      Chicago

      Neighbors

      The 1900s: A New Era

      The Town

      Miss Lucille Beemer

      Chicago

      The Neighbor Boy

      The Telegram

      Spring Has Sprung, and So Has a Young Man’s Fancy

      Meet Me at the Fair

      More Than Meets the Eye

      Elmwood Springs, Missouri

      Chicago

      Is It You?

      In the Glove Department

      July Fourth

      Chicago

      Oregon

      A Sad Time

      A Change of Address

      Life Moves On

      Reunited

      Nancy Knott

      The Dating Game

      More Good Friends

      The Twenties: All the Wonderful Things in Store

      Elmwood Springs Is Looking Up

      The Shoe Department

      Ingrid Nordstrom

      Fun at Still Meadows

      The Wedding

      The Little White Box

      Missing Mrs. Knott

      The Thirties: The Show Must Go On

      Dancing Cows

      Unexpected Visitors

      Things Are Looking Up

      Problem Solving

      The Trap

      Elner’s Dream

      It Don’t Mean a Thing If It Ain’t Got That Swing

      The Forties: The World Speeds Up

      Good News

      A New Year

      San Francisco, California

      San Francisco

      The War

      V-J Mail

      Iwo Jima, Japan

      Elmwood Springs

      San Francisco, California

      Saying Hello

      The Baby

      August 1945

      Good News

      It’s a Girl!

      Mayo Clinic

      All the News That’s Fit to Print

      Memorial Day

      The Boyfriend

      The Fabulous Fifties: All This and Elvis, Too

      A Special Day

      A Happy Time

      Poor Tot

      Lester Shingle

      A Visit to the Farm

      The Shoe Salesman Arrives

      Time to Let Go

      Welcome Home, Harry

      Bring Your Child to Work Day

      The Election

      Is It You?

      Catching Up

      The Sixties: Something’s Blowing in the Wind…

      Moving Along

      Leaving Home

      Hello, Cooter

      A Special Boy

      The Young Man

      Cinderella and Her Prince Charming

      You Must Be Kidding

      The Seventies: Saturday Night Fever

      Vietnam

      Ida Jenkins

      Elner Moves to Town

      The Anniversary

      Boston, Massachusetts

      Mother’s Day

      A Final Sale

      Another Anniversary

      Run for Your Life!

      Something Was Bothering Ander

      A Visit

      She Will Survive

      The Eighties: The World Turns

      Too Cool for Words

      Secret Dreams

      A Dream Come True

      October

      Oops

      The Parade

      Bad Karma or Two Gold Chains

      Growing Older

      The Early Bird Special

      The Nineties: Walmart and Supercuts

      More Changes

      Little Miss Davenport

      The Sunset Club

      The Milkman

      Achy Breaky Heart

      A New Millennium: The End of an Era

      Elner Moves On

      The Kid

      Verbena’s Unfortunate Trip to the Ladies’ Room

      All the News Fit to Print

      A Blue Christmas

      Howdy, Neighbor

      Happy Birthday

      Hello, Tot!

      Shreveport, Louisiana

      Parrot Head

      A Ship of a Girl

      Norma Has a Close Call

      What Happened

      Can You Hear Me Now?

      Case Closed

      The Redhead

      Overheard at Dinner

      Little Miss Davenport Tells All

      The Affair

      Another Visit from Dwayne Jr.

      Norma Growing Older

      Texting While Driving

      Surprise Visitors

      Norma

      Next Stop, Key West

      The Pie

      Dwayne Jr.

      The Tip

      The Off-the-Grid Goat Farm

      Who Done It?

      Macky Is Worried

      Hello, Macky!

      Winding Down

      Epilogue

      Dedication

      Acknowledgments

      By Fannie Flagg

      About the Author

      What the Crow Knows

      * * *

      They rise early, in the country and in cities, eager to start their serious crow business. They gather in large groups or, sometimes, just one or two. All day long, they soar high and low, calling out to the busy people below. They shout from t
    he trees, rooftops, and telephone wires…

      “NOW! NOW! LIVE NOW!”

      Poor old crows. They think they are talking, but the only thing the people hear is…

      “CAW! CAW! CAW!”

      Prologue

      * * *

      What can I tell you about the town? I suppose if you had driven through it back then, it might have looked like just another ordinary small town…but it wasn’t. I was born and raised there, so I know exactly what I am talking about. It wasn’t a wealthy town, either, but we all stuck together. And when we heard what had happened to Hanna Marie, everybody was upset. We all talked about it. Everybody vowed to do something about it. But never, in our wildest dreams, would anybody have guessed who would actually be the one to do it. Or, more importantly, how they would do it. But to tell you any more at this point might spoil the surprise. And who doesn’t like a good surprise? I know I do.

      A Friend

      1889

      * * *

      MISSOURI, USA

      At age twenty-eight, Lordor Nordstrom had left his home in Sweden for America, looking for land to buy. Months later, while crossing down through southern Missouri, he found a large tract of good, rich land with plenty of natural springs, just right for a dairy farm. After he had cleared an area for his farm, he placed an ad in the Swedish-American newspapers for young farmers to come and start a new community and soon others joined him, bringing their families and farm animals with them. By 1880, a small farming community had formed that other people in the area called Swede Town, in spite of the fact that two Germans and one Norwegian (who was suspected of being Finnish) now lived there.

      Today, Lordor Nordstrom stood on the top of a small hill looking over the long expanse of rolling green meadows and little white farmhouses below. It was so quiet and peaceful up here, nothing but the sound of birds and distant cowbells. He could see there was a most pleasant view from every angle. Exactly what he had been looking for.

      He would donate this land to the community and name it Still Meadows. Walking back down the hill, Lordor felt very pleased with himself. As the original settler, he felt a great responsibility to the settlers who had come after him. And he had just found the perfect spot for their final resting place in the upcoming years.

      In the following weeks, Lordor and all the local men cleared the land on the hill and began measuring and blocking out rows of burial plots. Each plot was given a number, written out in both Swedish and English, so there would be no confusion. They built a nice wooden arch as an entrance that was carved with flowers and read STILL MEADOWS CEMETERY, ESTAB. 1889.

      After all the landscaping was complete, Lordor called a meeting out at his farm, and announced that since they were all first settlers, their plots would be free, first come, first served, which seemed to Lordor the only fair way to do it. In the future, any newcomers would be charged fifty cents a plot.

      The following Sunday, all the families packed up their wagons and went up the hill to stake their claim with small sticks. Some, like the Swensens, who hoped to start a large family, staked out an entire row of twenty or more plots to provide for the ones already here and those yet to come.

      Birdie Swensen was very happy with their choice. She was quite musical and liked hearing the birds and cowbells in the distance. She liked the view as well. She said to her husband, “Look, Lars, you can see our farm and the windmill from here. It will be so nice for the children when they come to visit.” Mr. and Mrs. Henry Knott wanted to look back at the cornfields.

      Although the flat area on the top of the hill was rather large, and they could have spread around, most people are creatures of habit. They all tended to pick out spots right next to their neighbors, much as they lived below, Lordor in the middle, under the big oak tree, and everyone else around him. Everybody, that is, except Old Man Hendersen, who marched way over to the other side and stuck his stick there. Someone once said that Eustus Hendersen liked his mules better than he did people, and he had agreed.

      “Mules are mean, but at least they don’t talk your head off when you see them.”

      Later, after everyone had chosen a plot, they sat down for a picnic lunch. Blueberries were in season, so the ladies had made pies. Mr. Lindquist played his fiddle, and Mrs. Knott played her accordion. All in all, it was a fun afternoon.

      Of course, at the time, none of them knew about all the strange and mysterious events that would take place on that hill. And even if you had told them, they wouldn’t have believed you in a million years.

      Lordor guessed that preparing a place to spend eternity and trying to figure out how many plots to set aside for himself was what made him think about his future. At the ripe old age of thirty-seven, he was still one of the many bachelor farmers living in the area. He hadn’t meant to be. He’d just been busy trying to turn a no place into a someplace. There were five married ladies, who were always at him to find a nice woman and settle down, but finding a wife was not an easy thing to do.

      Lordor wasn’t against the idea. A few years earlier, and at their insistence, he had tried to meet someone. That spring, he’d had his hair cut by a real barber, purchased a brand-new pair of shoes out of a catalog, and traveled all the way over to the Swedish community of Lindsborg, Kansas. But when he got there, he found out that all the good women were already taken. So Lordor had come back home empty-handed with nothing but the same new shoes and a good haircut.

      Swede Town really was in dire need of more women. As it stood now, they couldn’t even throw a decent square dance. When they did, all the men had to take turns wearing a white handkerchief tied around their arms to signify that they were now assuming the role of a female partner. And having to dance and hold hands with another grizzly, callused, hard-skinned farmer had a way of making the real women seem a lot more beautiful, softer, and much more delicate than they really were. Their lack of ladies was causing them to lose good workers as well. After dancing with five-foot-tall, three-feet-wide Nancy Knott, one young farmhand later told Lordor, “When Mrs. Knott starts to look good to you, it’s time to move on.” And he did.

      Lordor figured if he was ever going to make another attempt at finding a nice lady, the time was now. He had a new contract to sell milk and cheese to the railroad workers, and his financial future was now secure enough to support a wife. Besides, he was lonely. He wanted someone to share the new house he had just built. But courting a lady properly was a time-consuming proposition, and at present, he didn’t have enough of it. He was short on help, and his dairy farm required him to be there full-time.

      —

      AT THE NEXT BARN RAISING, as everyone was sitting at a long wooden table having lunch, Lordor talked the situation over with his neighbors. Henry Knott, a bandy-legged little hog farmer seated down at the other end, called out, “Hey, Lordor…why don’t you advertise for one of them mail-order brides? That way, she comes to you, and no work time’s lost.”

      All the women jumped on that notion in a hurry. “Oh, Lordor,” said Mrs. Eggstrom, “that’s exactly what you should do.”

      Lordor pulled a skeptical face at the idea, but Mrs. Lindquist, waving a spoon at him, said, “I know what you’re thinking, Lordor, but there’s no shame to it. A lot of men out west are doing it, and there must be plenty of nice Swedish girls out there looking to marry.”

      “She’s right,” added Birdie Swensen, who had just placed another piece of fried chicken in front of him. “And if the girl is interested, she sends you her photograph. That way, we can all get a look at her and help you decide.”

      Lordor still felt reluctant. He was a little bit shy around women anyway, and the idea of marrying a total stranger made him feel uneasy. But in the end, Mrs. Knott summed it up for him. “You’re getting old, Lordor. Get to it!” He guessed it wouldn’t hurt anything to at least try. So a week later, a small ad appeared in a Swedish-American newspaper in Chicago.

      SWEDISH MAN OF 37 YEARS LOOKING FOR SWEDISH LADY FOR MARRIAGE.

     


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